I do feel sorry for Mohamed Al Fayed. He seems to be a nasty, arrogant little man, but he’s also a man who’s been irreparably broken by tragedy.
It’s sad that he’s using his public position for paranoid ranting, it’s sad that the legal system is giving him a platform for this, and it’s sad that there’s all the media-fuelled chuckling and sneering.
Whether his case is malicious posturing or heartfelt delusion or a mixture of the two, it appears that Al Fayed has spent the last decade of his life stuck in that tunnel in Paris.
3 comments:
I feel sorry for him. But aren't some things he is saying libelous?
I'm not entirely sure how it works in the UK, but I think statements in court are protected (as well as the press actually printing such statements).
From libel and such, anyway.
I think that's right - if not, then couldn't any prosecutor (or prosecution witness) be open to libel proceedings if the defendant is found not guilty?
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